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> FOR
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WEAK LUNGS
CATARRH
CONSUMPTION
THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 16TH, 1915.
Cutler Farmer & &
De Merchany of the
NAPIER JOHNSTONE'S
“SQUARE BOTTLE”
WHISKY.
··· UNVARIED FOR OVER
150 YEARS.
CRICKET.
HONGKONG 0.0. V. KOWLOON C. C.
This two-day's match was commegood by the Hongkong 0.0 ground on Satur day, and concluded on Monday, Hong bong gaining the victory by four wickets. In Kowloon's first venture, the batting of Liont, Muna and Major Robertson was the outstanding feature. Both bats combined an effective defence with punish- ing strokes all round the wicket, Major Bobertson registering one 6 and eleven 4's and Lieut. Mann nine 4's and one 0. Tho latter also batted excellently in the second ingings, securing eight 4's in his contribu tica of 43. T. E. Tonroe batted steadily for his invaluable 80, among his scoring Scores strokes being eight boundaries. and analyses:
KOWLOON.
JP. Robinson, Goco, b Anderson 9 J. Munu, e Maas, 6 Sayer.
Major Stansield, b R. Hancock ...... F. J. de Rome, e Moore, b R. Hancock 27 Major T. Robertson, not out 76
HONGKONG POLICE vi ORAIGENGOTER,
Played on the Police ground yesterday, with the following result:-
URAIDENGOWER.
J. D. Noris, b-Kelly
R G. Southerten, c and b Cooper
J. V. Braga, Pitt, b Booker
8. Jex, b Booker
37
3.
B. A. Carfalloj i King
D. K. Kheras, b Cooper
W. H. Vivéash b Ccopor
28:
R. Basa; c Pitt, b Booker
8
L. A. Rose, not out
98
ล
W. Raso, b Kelly 4
3. F. Billimoria, b, Kelly
Extras
20
Total
143
67.
POLICE.
9
T. H. King; retire!).
10
Alexander, c Basa, b Carvalho.........
21
Booker, o Basa, b Southortonn
в
Pitt, b Southerton .......
:7
Kelly, st. Noria, & Carvalho
3
10
Robertson, b Carvalho
វា.
F. Sutton, b Donnelly-
#
Reid, b Southerton.
10
A. "R. F. Raven, e Anderson, b
Donnelly
Cooper, b Carvalho.
17
Matthews, not out
Leigh, b Carvalho..
Extras
24
Taylor, e Braga, b Carvalho
Extras
ვ.
Total
.251
0
M.
Total
50-
Anderson
14:3
69
[04
Donnelly
11
3
40
3
Sayer
53
R. Hancock
1 10
44
Thursfeld
3
18
HONGKONG.
THE SAME TO-DAY AS IN 1745.
BEWARF OF
IMITATIONS
SOLE AGENTS IN HONGKONG
LANE CRAWFORD & CO.
and from ALL WINE M
ERUPTION ALL OVER CHILD'S LIMBS
Little Bay Also Broke Out. Other Little Girl Had Face Same. Cuti- scura Soap and Ointment Healed.
7.74. Cranbrook Rd. St. John's, London, 8. Es Eng" My littlo girl than five years old had her sido badly hurt, the skin belug
last were great
Botes
over. Tarako matins
K. t. Macaskill, e Mass, b R. Hancock 7
H. H. Tayler, o Thursfeld b Anderson 3
E. B. Reed, b Donnolly
W. L. Weaser, o Hancock, b Anderson
T. B. Pearce, e and b Macaskill
D. E. Donnelly, not out.
HOWLOON.-Second Innings,
CIVIL SERVICE II. KOWLOON HI. This match was contested on the ground of the Kowloon C.C. yesterday, Scores and analyses
CIVIL SERVICE.
C. J. Tacchi, & Mycock; b Schultz 15 PT. Lamblo, Evans
.126
W.
S. S. Moore, b Reed
-0
C. A. Hoopor, Reed b Macaskill.
1
H. M. Maus b Macaskill
E. J. Mitchell, b Tayler..
38
G. R. Sayer, o and Macaskill
HR. Hancock, e Robinson, B de
Rom
R. C. Witchell, b Overy..................
5
41
R. N. Anderson,. b Reed
... 43
R. C. Barlow, o Schmitz, b Goldsmith 22 W. Hill e Silkstone, bi Overy:
6
R. P. Thursfield, o and b-Macaskill: 8
T. W. Wood, e Church, b Goldsmith
9
A. L. Gace, e do Rome, b Reed
3
R. W. Bearne, & Evans, b Goldsmith... 10
22
B. Bradbury, b Overy
8.
Extras
Waterson, e and ↳ Goldsmith,
3
F. Bacon; b Goldsmith
ubbed off. soon formal a
It
Total
270
S. R. Moore, not out
0
Bowling Analysis.
Extras
grost mastery sare. Her legs at
0.
R.
Reed
23:5
81-
3
•Total
Macaskill
.25 2
89
5
til
Taylor
12
0
44
-1
Bowling Analysis
de Itomo
Worse my sto
Raven
70
2
35
1
ы.
15 0
.0
Stalker
1
17
0
boy aged tight
brofzo.
out
Illa
Schultz
6
face was
tho
Overy
D
25
43
Evans
4.10
10
Major Stansfield, e Moore, b Maas
5
Goldsmithi
.6. 3
12
5
F. Jde Rome, Pearce, Hancock... 16
Major Robertson, b Anderson
17
KOWLOON .
Evans, retired
47
H. H. Taylor, e Mcore, b Anderson 14
Blackbura, c Bacon, b. Waterson
25
Goldsmith, c Lamble, b Witchell
3
Silkstone, Waterson-
J. Stalker, b Witchell
7
A
T. Overy, Eb.v., b Waterson
15
0
Church, e Barlow, b Waterson
0
11
Davidson, b. Waterson ....
2
O. Mycock, b Witchell,
128
J. Schultz Witchell
0
P. Shroff, not out
...
W.
Donnelly Sayer
· 10
1. 36
0
2 23
Hanocek Mans
€ 1.
22
Anderson
31 10 6.1 0
12
17
4
worst. It w03 # dreadful night..
Then my fttle girl two and one half years The chil- had her face the same in no time, dren were tormented with the terrible irr tation. My little boy used to pick at his his steep that we really. Ears so much thought he would pick it all away. This troude would form in risttery picaples and In no time they would break and turn into great ugly scabs. They did not know what It was so get a night's rest for weekca
"I my the Cuticura Soap and Olatment advertised in the paper so I thought I would try them. The first night they stopt batter bathed thom regularly thro tim t day and dressed the placas with the - Outicura Olotment and they were cared."? - (8)gned) Mrs. Mary Lipproas, Jan 22, 1914.
Samples Free by Post Ahbough Cuticura Soap and Ointment aro sold throughout the world, a sample of each with 32-D. Skin Book will be scat free upon request. Address post-card: F. New- bery & Sons, 27, Charterhouse Bgy London.
Weak blood
JP.Robinson, sl. Gace, b Sayer J Lt. Mann, c Pearce, b Mans
K. R. Macaskill, h. Hancock,
A. R. F. Raven, e Hancock, b Ander-
103
F. Sutton, e Thursfeld, b. Sayer...
E. B. Reed, b Anderson W. L. Weaser, not out Extras
Total
Bowling Analysis,
HONGEONO-Second Innings.
T. E. Pearce, e Reed, b Tayler 0
Extras
Total
115
THE ROOF OF ASIA.
A GLACIER PLATEAU AT: 20,000 FEET
KARAKORAM EXPLORATION.
OUTSIDE THE EALE OF ČIVILIZATION.
WHAT PROFESSOR BAYCE THINKS OF PRUSSIAN OLAIMS.
A SOATHING: CRITICISM,
Prof. A. H. Sayo sends a coathing letter to The Times, in which he states:-
It is astonishing that British scholars and, politicians should still be found speaking of our intellectual debt to But theorice made in Ger- Germany
Dr. de Filippi sende to the Royal Geo graphical Society from Suget Karaul (Chinesa Turkestan) an nocount of the further scientific work of his oxpedition. On May 15th the whole expedition started from Leb, in Ladak, for the Karakoram, by the new read which is mentioned in the last report. On June 2nd the expedi- many hare so long been accepted at the tion pitched their camp in the western valuation of their authora both in this and higher portion of the Depsang country and in America, where the young plateau by the side of a small rivulet, the generation has sat obediently at the feet of Teutonic professors, that it hae only permanent stream of the plains.
Several special exoursions were sont become dificult to see them in their true out, but the read exploration work began light. As to music, I can say nothing, on July lab. The aim, according to the for I am not a musician. In literatum original plan, was to ascertain the posi- Germany has Goothe, who ocupies the Heyne was a Jew, who tion of and to survey the Indo-Asiatic first rank. watershed between the Siachen glacier and regarded the Germans as barbarians. the Karakoram Pass. The Survey of Schiller was a milk-and-water Long In philosophy there are Kunt India map of this district, drawn from follow. sketches made in 1881-1800 by Johnson, and Hegol, but Kant was more than half shows to the cast Siachen a group of Scottish in origin, and it is difficult to glaciers which do not flow beyond the say what the Hegelian philosophy would they have been had the Gorman language been confines of the valleys whore
We look in originate. To one of these glaciers the more cultivated. In science none of the name of Remo" is given. In 1809 Dr. great names is German. T. G. Longstaff, after completing the rain for any that can be put by the side. exploration of the Siachen, went up the of those of Newton, Darwin, Faraday, Shyok river to its source and was much Laplace or Pasteur. Even in mechanical impressed by the appearance of the cone hardly one of the great inventions He was of modern times the steam engine, tho glaciers from which it springs. the first to surmise their importance and telegraph and telephone, the motor-car, size, and the present exploration was the acroplane, the wireless telegraph entirely due to his advice and informa has been made in Germany." tion.
In my own departments of study, it is 'Bopp's Indo-European The results havo quite justified his pro the same tale. visions. The exploration was carried out family of speech was stolen as usual, Major Wood, without acknowledgment) from Sir Wil by two separate parties. with Mr. Spranger and the surveyor Shiliam Jones, and the decipherment of the Lal, undertook the survey of the southern Egyptian and cunciform inscriptions has. and orthorn aspects of the watershed boon due to French and British scholars. between the Remo basin and the Kara- In 1881 the Egyptologue Dr. Lepsins, a koraan Pass; Dr. de Filippi, Commr. gentleman and scholar of the old school.. Alessio, Professor Abatti, and Lieutenant remarked to me that when we come!:
and across a new inscription we first get Dr. Autills, with Jamna Forsbad Petigax, went directly to the Rems Birch (the Keeper of the Oriental Departs ment of the British Museum) to decipher. glacier. It took one month to survey it, and the parties were greatly hampered it, and then we can analyse it philologie by an unexpected obstacle the persistent ally," and what he said embodied a world bad weather which prevailed over a vast of truth. area of the country through most of July and part of August. Notwithstanding this, Lieutenant Antills was able to secure a good number of photographic plates and panoramas, which will sufficiently illustrate the Remo. On August 13th the whole expedition wu again united at the Depsang camp.
MODERN MAPS DISPROVED...
The exploration has proved the water. shed range, the position and direction of the valleys, and the distribution of the glaciers to be entirely different from the representation in modern maps. The river Shyok originates from a single vast glacial basin, to which Dr. de Filippi has left the name Remo, athough it is un- known to natives, and has no meaning in any of the local languages. The Remo is formed by two large glaciers, a western and & northern one, which meet nearly at a right angle at the bottom of their valleys, and end at about 16,000ft. of altitude with a single common front, 300ft, high, which fills the whole width of the Shyok valley, Those glaciers are 2 to 24 miles long, two to five miles broad, and the total area of the basin is about 240 square miles.
The German can laboriously count syllables and words and pile up volumes of indices; he can appropriate other men's discoveries in the interests of
culture but beyond this, us. I have been seeking to show for years in the domain of Oriental archeology, we get from him only theories which take no regard of facts, though as coming from. Germany we are told that they must be regarded as infallibl Porson was prohi ably right when he wrote:-
The Germans at Greck Aro sadly 1 seks- Not one in five- sepre,,- But nicety-nine more;
All, all excopi ffermann, And Herman's a German. On the artistic side perhaps the less
Nor are said the better. German, taste in architec ture and dress is proverbial. the graces of social life generally cor sidered to distinguish Clerman society. A people who have destroyed the ar treasures of Belgium and Eastern Franc have deliberately aimed their guns at t noblest and most sacred of buildings, have wantonly burned the books manuscripts of the past aro outsid pale of culture said civilisation. To the cast of the Reme the glaciers are still what they were 15 centuri suddenly disappear, except for sume the barbarians who raided our an insignificant single icefields, which makes and destroyed the civilisation
Bowling Analysis the presence of such a vast glacial basin Roman Empire. For a thousand
Witchell
1
49
G. R. Sayer, b Reed
32
Hill
26
[68-92
E. J. Mitchell, e and b Reed
Wood
13.
S. S. Moore, c Sutton,
do Rome 33
Waterton
10
26
H. R. Hancock, not out
means lack of nourishment to every part of the body and results in loss
of energy, impaired vitality and poor health, SCOTT'S en- riches the blood provides
And
nourishment for muscles and bones, nerves and brain. For weakly men, women and children all doctors recommend genuine
SCOTT'S Emulsion
Sold by all Chemista.
C. A. Hooper, lbw., Tayler
D. E. Donnelly, c Munn, h Macaskill 13
Tayler Reed Mucaskill
Extraa
Total
...10
:117
R. W.
20
2
9 0 33 2 8.50 44 1 14.07.
UNIVERSITY.
de Rome
CIVIL SERVICE Played on Saturday, and ended in a draw, in favour of the Varsity, for whom Brayshay again basted brilliantly. A splendid innings by Lamble saved the game for the Civil Service Scores and analyseH TE
UNIVERSITY. D
K. Brayalay, e Tacchi, b Waterson ... 85 Ng Sze Kwong, b Hon. Mr. C. Severn O Chan Wing To, e Hill, b. Hon. Mr. C.
Sorern,
27
G. E. Marley, c Lamble, b Hon. Mr.
Severa
J. D. Wright, b Watersqu
-0.
[55-3
H.'W. Turnbull. b Hill ...
0
U. G. Anderson, o Bacon, b Waterson..
0.
F. A. Redmond, run out
21.
7
8
0
HAVE YOU A
BAD LEG
Wid Wounds that dishangs or otherwias,
· Perbase | Emrumded with a flormation and swollen, that when
Enger on the hy
lovas the layer undit tha hizi you which deñas all the “havatzied, Pachaja swollan, the solos
ibus akin sing ka die-
may be wounda;.
+508 +01, PRADIU
of the
"You may hava
hospitals -und
la hopelsas, DB
to amputatlan.
being ulcersted he makina,rozed which asloured, or share
tings, will depriva
'attended] Various
· Been told woWN CRIS wävlaced to mabonit bide not for_1
man men yongji dosti maz vechipe, but i wil
Bend to the Dest Chest fat a 2an al-
GRASSHOPPER
Ho Wing Kin, not out
Chan Yat Kwong, not out Wei Wing Lock, did not bet
Extras
Waterson
Bacon
Total (for 8 wickets) 176
Bowling Analysis.
CIVIL SERVICE.
P. T. Lamble, not out
C. J. Tacchi, a Ho Wing Kin, b
Brayshay
C. Sama, e Wright, b Anderson
THE THAMES FLOOD.
HEAVIEST RAINFALL ON RECORD.
3,015,000,000 TONS,
at the extreme limit of the Karakoram zone covered with ice all the more remark able
Both the western and the northern valleys are very wide, and rise with vary gentle slope up to the upper basing. The wastorn Reno leads up to a vast amphitheatre of imposing mountains.
The northern Remo, which is the larger
the blight of German conquest hun Western Europe, until at last the querers perished in interaccino e or were absorbed into the older po tions, and the dark ages came to an
We must trust that they will not ref under a new avalanche of Teutonio barism, and that the Germans 7
"
of the two glaciors, flows between rauges resume their old vocation as the int
German not very high nor very impressive. Testual "hewers of wood and drawers i rises northward for about six miles, up water for Western Europe. to a sort of circus, where it bonds to the has no ancient culture to fall back upon, north-east, to reach at 19,700ft. of altitudo and what that muins may be best under- basin so vast and so even that it has stood from the contrast between Germant the appearance of a plateau. The glacier savagery in the present war and the fills it to the brim, and appears to over chivalry of the civilised Japanese in their flow between peaks which stand alone like war with Russia R islands in the ice One of the cols, to
Some remarkable figures in regard to the record Thames Valley floods were given by Lord Desborough, Chairman of
the west, communicates with the Siachen the Thames Conservancy, at a meeting of basin; another, to the north, is on the DIAMONDS AT HALF-PRICE.
de watershed. the Board.
GERMANY'S OFFER TO AN AMERICAN FIRM,
It is much to be regretted He said the rainfall over the Thames that the persistent bad weather and the basin for nine weeks ended January 5th large quantity of newly-fallen snow was 12.38 inches, which was equal to a prevented the expedition from actually fall of 3,015,000,000 tome, or 682,507,000,000.
either of these saddles. reaching gallons of water over the 3,812 square Through a saddle to the west-of the A new proof of Germany's need for cash miles of the Thames basin. The rainfall
Karakoram Pass Major Wood and his is supplied by her action in regard to the since January 5th had been over one inch;
party had entered a large basin of con- stock of rough diamonds from German. which was considerably above the average fluent valleys, which he identified as South-West Africa. The normal value is rate. This was the highest rainfall over
connected with the Yarkand river. The 403, to 465, a carat, and it is estimated that the whole of the Thames Valley for a search for its sources had led him directly about one million and a half carats are equal period during the 31 years that
to this same tongue of the Remo, glacier at present stored in Berlin The demand records had been kept. The average of and at the same time had given them the for rough diamonds has naturally ceased, 31 years rainfall for the similar nine opportunity of connecting the survey and the British Diamond Syndicate has
The small weeks of the year was 5.55 inches, equal work with Dr. de Filippi's.
of the struggle
The London Daily press understands from a high official source that to secure cash the German Government syndicato has offered its stock to an American concern for 208. a carat more than 50 por cent, under the value.
MARTIAL LAW IN STRASBURG.
in quantity to 1,354,000,000 tons, or take which Hayward in 1888 thought to not offered any for sale since the outbreak 300,565,000,000 gallons of water. The be the source of the Yarkand river is excess over the average falling over the about 15 miles from the glacier, and has Thames watershed was, therefore, 6.81 practically no part in the feeding of the inches of rain, or 376,012,000,000 gallons river. of water,
WORK FOR FURTHER EXPLORATION. A minfall of 12.36 inches in nine weeks
The expedition has thus ascertained the represented nn average fall of moet remarkable fact of one and the same 10,833,0000,000 gallons daily over the catch glacier, the Remo, giving rise to the ment area of the Thames basin. The Shyok river, tributary of the Indus, and river when flowing banic full, with all the to the Yarkand river, whose waters end fully drawn, would discharge in the deserts of Central Asis. The weirs 4,500,000,000 gallons daily as measured at Yarkand river, a few hundred yards below Teddington Weir, and taking into con its origin, receives an important tribut- SENT TO PRISON FOR SPEAKING sideration the rise and fall of the tide at ary which comes from a glacier over- that place. The capacity of the river was riding a saddle, and draining on both therefore, insufficient to carry off so large sides of it, Lower down the valley A Swiss commercial man who recently a volume se 10, 633,000,000 gallons without spreads out in a vast circus, where several returned from Strasburg says that the Hoods occurring such as had recently been tributarios join it. Major Wood went strictest martial law obtains there. It is experienced. Had there been two Rivers down stream for about 60 miles, and rigorously forbidden to speak a word of Thames, equal in capacity to the existing ascertained the existence of two consider-Fronch in the city, and scores of French river, they would not have been large able western tributaries which must Bow people have been sammored lately before enough to take all the water which foll as from the northern slopes of the Kara- the military authorities and sent to pri rain, without some flooding, though, of koram, and which will be the object of on simply because they banghen coure, this would have been much less the next exploration.
hamed part i
Severn HO Sara Bradbury Lamble
9. 14.
1 50 3 8. 0 29
0
0
2
14
03
5.0 35
0
2 1
48
2 0.
9
0
66
11
1:
C. W. Wood, Wai: Wing Lock, b
8
F. Bacon, b Brayshay
F. Hell, b Brayshay
2
V. Hill, b Ho Wing Kin
0
record
"flood
WB. Bradbury, and b Brayshay
2
[87
B. Waterson, c and b Turebull ...
14
weeks was as follows:
Hon. Mr. C. Severn, did not bat
Total fall in...
Extras
11
4
1894 1915 2 weeks preceding day of Inches. Inches.
4.384.30 maximum dow
6.16 5,57 8.34 8.00
0: H:
TW
59 5
14
1
#INTERNT. and PILLE, vhich is a certain gure for "Had Legi. Poisoned Manda; Unerated Joints, · Henanglèʻa Kona, Carbunnies › Sector and Inzict Estes koj Re: English Prices, 1/1à u ** Mah. See, Trade Mark of a GresshoppET ON Green Label. Prepared by ALBERT, Albert Mason, 13 Ferrinaden Sizest. Lombo. England. Agents: A. 8. WATHON & CO., LTD., Hongkong.
THINH FIGNRE. Hài Bói T
palco 2,9 leading
THERAPION Chemists, Cum
BLOOD POISON, ZIDKEY, SLADER, URINART I
SOPRESS DIECHARGES, WEAKNESS.PILES. SEND STAMP A ENVELOPE TYCK FREE BOOKLET, TO DR. LE CLKER FEED.CO.HAVESSTOCK SO. HAMPSTEAD, LOWDINING, PARIS DEPOT: 17. E CANIGLIONE: W, KOURLAI NEW YORK BEPOZE 10, BEEKMAN STAR For You TTY LEWDZAGERİKASTELLYANN FORM OF KALY TO TAKE
THERAPIONATE
SEE THAT TRAUS MARKED WORD "THERAPIOK' BR17,GOVE BEAMF KINYUMED SO ALL GENUINE TAČKURU
109
......... Brayshay olya
Brayshay
Anderson
Total (for 8 wickets)...113 Bowling Analysis.
Ho Wing Kit . Turnbill
1
0 than in the present instance.
of
The expedition had been several weeks
FRENCH.
gua mpublicusKTUA
are, he says, sixty-two temporary Compared with the similar records pro without any news of the world, owing hospitals in the city, the Imperial Palace Deeding the great November, 1994, the rainfall for nine to an interruption of the road in the the Law Courts and the High School Shrok valley, when, on August 16th, thoy being among the buildings co used. The received five European mails and, from burgemaster recently sequestrated India, the dramatic news of the conflagra property belonging to French people." tion which had broken out in Europe.
8.36 9.34
8.72 10.83
8.99 11:07 9.53 11.75 10.38 12.36
England and Italy were said not to be
A very amusing story is being told of entangled in it. Beveral Italian members one of a new special battalions. The
battalio
of the expedition left for home at ones. On August 20th the expedition left with all their things to croes the ranges into
las a Great Dane mascot, and one day - a ceremonial parade, at which Chinese Turkestan. They are at present the animal was present, she gave two loud, engaged in completing the geophysical deep barks, whereupon the whole battalion
formed fours
station.